ISLAMABAD – The chief of Pakistan’s top corruption regulator has ordered an inquiry against Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan for his reported use of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister’s official helicopters.

The chairman of National Accountability Bureau (NAB), Javed Iqbal directed KP-DG to ascertain how CM Pervez Khattak handed over his official helicopter to someone else and find out if the same was repeated with other individuals, according to a press release issued on Friday.

On January 29, a private TV channel reported that the KP government spent millions of rupees on Imran’s use of the provincial government’s helicopters.

Imran Khan is the chairman of the party – PTI – which runs the provincial government after it came to power in 2013 elections.

In addition, the provincial NAB chief has been tasked to determine if the KP-CM misused his authority.

Documents from the KP administration department show that the PTI chairperson used the KP government’s helicopters free of charge for a total of 74 hours to travel approximately 18,000 kilometres, the NAB statement said.

The provincial government recorded in its books a total expense of Rs2.1 million at approximately Rs28,865 per hour for Khan’s 40 trips on the two helicopters – an Mi-17 and an Ecureuil.

Similar trips using a private helicopter would have cost the PTI chairperson nearly Rs11.1 million, according to the statement.

Khan used the Mi-17 for 21 hours 50 minutes on 12 trips amounting to a recorded expense of Rs1.270.

Similarly, he used the Ecureuil helicopter 28 times for a total of 52 hours and 5 minutes, amounting to a recorded expense of Rs0.837m.

Combined, Khan used both helicopters for a total of 73 hours and 55 minutes, resulting in an expense of Rs2.107m recorded by the provincial government.

The PTI chief, whose party governs Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, used the helicopters to fly to and from Bani Gala, Islamabad, Mardan, Peshawar, Abbottabad, Haripur, Swat and Nathiagali, Kohat, Batagram, and Chakdara, among other places.

However, in its documents, the administration department mentioned the purpose of the flights as “official use and urgent nature of work”.

The press release further states that NAB has started the inquiry so that official helicopters are not misused in the future.